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“Lectures†reviewed by Tokafi

Piotr Kurek wrote the music and composed the structure of his work ‚Lectures‘ like a surrealistic novel. And most of the time a novel has a hero. In this case that hero is the late Cornelius Cardew. Being a scholar and gifted contributor to the world famous Karl-Heinz Stockhausen, with whom he collaborated for a good three years, Cardew also laid hands on the piece Carre as a composer under the supervision of the master himself.
Not merely satisfied with that he engaged in several musical adventures, frequently changing his compositional structures and developing into one of the most experienced free style adventurers, influencing a legion of experimental musicians in the process. One of his works, The Great Learning, must have been at least one of the major reasons why Piotr Kurek created this album. With the aid of Cardew’s son Walter, who contributed some tapes of his father’s lectures, this musical experimental novel came to life.
While Cardew’s voice, for most of the time, sounds as thought it were being emitted by a partially defunct radio, it is intermixed with what seem to be live-instruments, which drift along in a free style that indeed doesn’t know any limits. Although sometimes harmonic sound parts appear, they are blown away like whirling autumn winds blow apart a bunch of fallen leaves. Driven into corners of wild ineptitude, they are pulled together as if drawn by a mighty magnet again and again, while in the background, the master lectures…
The complete absence of any notion of rhythm, despite the presence of percussive instruments, is another major feature of this album. Rudimentary elements of structure are exclusively provided by the instruments involved. Some electronically produced material can be detected but they seamlessly join force with those instruments. Wavelike sounds wash ashore of the endless musical groundswell that keeps coming and going… maybe one of the basic lessons we are about to learn.
On track 5, ‘Cardboard Cups’, we hear Cardew talk about the differences between jazz performances by the same artist on an album and in a live performance leading some listeners to be disappointed by the very different effects. This is also in some ways a turning point in Kurek’s music. While still experimental, we now hear free jazz elements join in with their typical improvisational elements. Flowing into each other the two genres create a new and surely exiting one, spiced with evenly jazzy and experimentally mixed comments of the celebrated master Cardew.
Overall, this album is something like a musical monument errected in honour of one of the great pioneers of modern music. And I dare say that it could hardly have been built any better than what Piotr Kurek has done here – his music is a genuine testimony of what the masters lectures were all about.
By Fred M. Wheeler
via Tokafi
Vote for Marc Behrens’s “Compilation Works 1996-2005â€

Marc Behrens’s “Compilation Works 1996-2005†has been nominated for the Qwartz 6 Music Award (in the “Anthologies†category). The public voting has already opened and will remain open until March 15. The awards will be announced in April 2, 2010 in Paris.
To vote for Marc Behrens, all you need to do is to send an email stating your vote for “Marc Behrens: Compilation Works 1996-2005†to anthology_6@qwartz.org.
You can check the list of nominations at Qwartz’s website and if you still haven’t, you can freely download Marc Behrens’s release from Crónica.
“Lectures†reviewed by Fourth Dimension

Ten pieces originally composed by this Warsaw-based artist for a festival in the very same city in 2007, created in honour of Cornelius Cardew. Using previously unreleased sounds culled from performances, lectures and rehearsals by Cardew (and passed onto Piotr by his son, Walter), Kurek has subsequently developed them during the time since to simultaneously pay respect to them and tease them into a context more his own. The resulting compositions are surprisingly accessible on the whole, often working themselves around repetitive melodic fragments, sizeable chunks of dialogue, tiny gusts of sax spurting, swaying tonal wisps, and hints of mannered jazz that wholly betray the clanging that greets us at the disc’s entrance. Rather airy and full of movement, Lectures is a perfectly hewn listen that I’m sure would have been worth hearing in its original form, live, too. Kurek has done a good and respectful job here and, if Cornelius Cardew were still alive, I’d like to believe he’d feel much the same way. (Richard Johnson)
via Fourth Dimension
New Cronicáster: Mathias Delplanque

“Call Center†is the stereo version of a multichannel sound installation I realised for the exhibition “Bombay Maximum City†in the shape of the “Lille 3000†festival which happened in Lille (France) between October 2006 and January 2007. The work is based on sounds recorded during the summer of 2006 in a call center in Gurgaon (suburbs of New Delhi), during a 3 weeks residency commissioned by the french embassy in India. It was originally broadcast on 6 speakers + 1 subwoofer.
“Lectures†reviewed by Skug

Der polnische Musiker Piotr Kurek ist Teil des Breakcore-Duos Slepcy. Die vorliegende Aufnahme, fast ausschließlich akustisch, ohne jeden Beat, überrascht angesichts dieses Backgrounds als Klangcollage aus Geige, Saxophon, Akkordeon und Anderen. Ein Haufen Instrumente, der gleichberechtigt vor sich hin klimpert. Das erinnert an ruhige Jazz-Improvisationen, lange, strukturlose Stücke alter Art-Rockhasen und frühe Throbbing-Gristle-Platten. Die Klänge kreisen um Zitate des Avantgarde-Komponisten Cornelius Cardew. Man hört ihn über Improvisation, Regelbruch und die Bedeutung des Fehlers in der Musik sprechen. Zu Beginn der CD fühlt man sich als Beobachter einer Straßenlaternen-beleuchteten Ecke einer Großstadt. Allerlei zieht vorbei, jedoch nichts Aufsehenerregendes. Vielleicht komm eine Gruppe betrunkener Jugendlicher, doch sie verschwindet wieder. “Lectures” ist zwielichtig, aber nicht unfreundlich. Die Musik fließt dahin, ohne größere Brüche oder Statements. Die Melodien breiten sich nicht aus, werden nicht groß. Sie sind beschnitten und entfremdet, wie CD-Hänger. Teils atonal und monoton, ohne jedoch aggressiv oder unschön zu werden. Solche Kompositions-Fetzen wiederholen sich und bewegen sich zueinander und übereinander. Hin und wieder hört man Ansätze von Solos, die jedoch nie die Aufmerksamkeit an sich reißen. Der Klang verdichtet sich mitunter in Richtung einer Wall of Sound, aber hält beim Mäuerchen inne. Die Instrumente lassen Platz. Der Sprecher Cardew wird von Hintergrundgeräuschen aus einem Proberaum begleitet und klingt wie durch ein weit entferntes Radio, während die Instrumente klar und nahe sind, ohne den Raum ganz auszufüllen. Zwei zueinander positionierte Ebenen klingen getrennt durch den Lautsprecher. Bei “Go Up” tritt eine verzerrte Gitarre aus, die von Trent Teznor eingespielt sein könnte. Ausnahmsweise kristallisiert sich ein treibendes Soundbrett heraus. Nach einigen Minuten klingt es aus und lässt die zerfaserte, holzige Struktur stehen, die die übrigen Stücke kennzeichnet.
“Erotikon†reviewed by Skug

Kaum irritierend ist das Teile einer nackten Frau zeigende 3-Fach-Hartpapierklappcover von The Beautiful Schizophonic. Jorge Mantas ist TBS und versenkt “Eroticon” (Crónica/A-Musik) – die CD steckte in diagonal angebrachten Schlitzen – im schwelgerisch-träumerischen Dronekitsch, kratzt aber noch die Kurve mit einem Sample des populären Chansons “Au Clair de la Lune”. Es stammt aus 1860 und ist vielleicht die erste Aufnahme einer menschlichen Stimme und, in diesen Kontext geloopt, enorm berührend.
“Compilation Works 1996-2005†reviewed by Terz Düsseldorf

Und noch eine temporäre Werkschau: Behrens hat sich als Grenzgänger zwischen Digitalprozessierung, Klangkunst und Elektroakustik profiliert, hat diverse Auftritte und Installationen weltweit absolviert und als Audio-Art-Dozent gewirkt. Das Audio dieser zwei CDs ist hochfaszinierend: äußerst filigran und spezifisch, intensiv, mitunter an der Grenze zur akustischen Wahrnehmung – es braucht Zeit und vor allem auch Raum, damit es sich entwickeln kann. Das alles ist sehr gut, noch besser aber ist, dass es unter cronicaelectronica.org zum free download bereitsteht – go get it! Honker
“Berlin Backyards†reviewed by Kathodik

Esposizione sonora d’interiora berlinesi. Quelle costituite per capirci, dai piccoli spazi aperti, nel retro delle case, delle botteghe. Luoghi usati di massima, per parcheggiare una bici, gettar rifiuti o per dare asilo al motore di un frigo; di un condizionatore. Esposizione d’interni dunque. Lo svizzero Gilles Aubry, vive a Berlino dal 2002, si occupa di installazioni acustiche ed ama le registrazioni ambientali. E Berlino, di materiale da scovare e trattare, ne offre parecchio. Piccole bolle di suono, che erompono dalla monotonia quotidiana di facciata. Il retro, è un brulicare di vita infinitesimale. Fissità metalliche quasi in loop, ventilatori sfondati che vibrano roteando, le voci dalle finestre, il traffico attutito dalla svolta di un angolo, l’immondizia trattata. Non pacificante, ma neanche sinistro. Intrigante per chi ha trascorsi industriali d’impronta dark ambient, meno facile per chi non è avvezzo a proposte del genere.
“Berlin Backyards”, ondeggia, fra il colloquiar sommesso, di un’istante statico, e lo stordente elevarsi di una cinghia di trasmissione in movimento. Con nel mezzo voci, cinguettii e balbettamenti meccanici. Onestamente, senza forzature. Ricordandoci, che la realtà , è una questione di percezione. E questa, è una bella questione. Marco Carcasi
via Kathodik
